Waste of time

People will try to convince you that some activities are bad. I'm thinking about drugs, casual sex, television watching and so on.

What I'd like to say is that bad can only be judged in context, so it's more meaningful to say that some activities block your time from being used on better things.

That three hours of TV wasn't bad... but you could have been that much better at playing guitar. Could've started a business or social group. Could've helped ANUS make more people aware of good metal. Could've socialized or read a book, or built a shed, or crucified a Nazarene.

AttheGates1996

What is time? Time is just the fourth dimension in which the universe is expanding. What is the purpose of time? Are our lives a waste of time? Or can time not be wasted, just spent differently? I believe it all ultimately comes down to what one wants. I want to better myself at guitar so I find time to practice everyday. When Iím sitting in my bed from midnight to 4 in the morning I have really have nothing else to do except relax, watch T.V., do various things on the internet, and occasionally practice guitar even more.

When Iím sitting in my bed from midnight to 4 in the morning I have really have nothing else to do except relax, watch T.V., do various things on the internet, and occasionally practice guitar even more.

Reading can be one of the greatest wastes of time. First is the immense amount of bad reading material out there. Secondly, you will forget the contents of a book you're not all that interested in. Thirdly is the loss of touch with reality which comes from excessive reading. And of course, knowledge can provide an inferior substitute for one's own personality or instinct, like a vine strangling a growing sapling.

Reading can be one of the greatest wastes of time. First is the immense amount of bad reading material out there. Secondly, you will forget the contents of a book you're not all that interested in. Thirdly is the loss of touch with reality which comes from excessive reading. And of course, knowledge can provide an inferior substitute for one's own personality or instinct, like a vine strangling a growing sapling.

Reading can be one of the greatest wastes of time. First is the immense amount of bad reading material out there. Secondly, you will forget the contents of a book you're not all that interested in. Thirdly is the loss of touch with reality which comes from excessive reading. And of course, knowledge can provide an inferior substitute for one's own personality or instinct, like a vine strangling a growing sapling.

I'd agree that reading excessively can do this. It happened to me a couple of years ago when I was really burned out from trying to absorb too much knowledge in addition to my other responsibilities, while not paying enough mind to my instincts as you mentioned. The lesson I learned was to only read compulsively until you have a fairly clear set of values and goals, and how to best apply them in the world around you (meaning it is time to become your own protagonist); after that reading can be saved for times when you need to research specific details. It can be extremely difficult to become balanced when devoting as much of your free time as possible to improving the mind, body, and soul. But ultimately, I find the process to be more rewarding than giving up and just resorting to something like drugs or entertainment to fill the day.

The ideal is to find the right kind of lifestyle that will allow me to balance them all for the long-term... which isn't always easy.